Pages

Friday, January 10, 2014

Yes, I know I said a couple of weeks ago that Finding Fiction Friday was going to go on a few-month hiatus. BUT ... when I found out last week that an old friend had just had his first book published, I absolutely had to share it and him here on the blog. So this is a very special Friday for me as I introduce you to the incredibly creative mind of Joe Heilman ...

Joe Heilman was born
and raised in Baltimore Maryland and is the Lead Storyteller at Poema Church in
Virginia Beach, Virginia. For over 20 years Joe has been telling crazy stories,
writing and singing decent songs, and hanging out in shady bars and churches.
Friar Tuck's Tales for The Common Outlaw is Joe's first collection of
mischievous parables.

Joe, tell us about your journey with this book. When did you first think about writing for
publication and how did it all come about?

About 4 years ago I was having lunch with a good friend who asked me if
I had a "bucket list." I replied that, for the most part, I felt like
I had accomplished a lot already and didn't really keep an active list of
"things left undone." But that conversation somehow rekindled
thoughts I had entertained through the years of someday writing a book. (I just
always assumed I would be in my sixties when I finally got around to it.)

I soon realized that I actually had a good start on one if I just began
to take the stories that I had created for use as a public speaker and began
massaging them into something readable.

I didn't really think about publishing it to a large audience until I
had my manuscript read by some authors I respected who encouraged me to publish
it in a more formal way.

Tell us one thing about yourself
that you think might surprise us.

Well, yes, I am a
pastor and storyteller, but before those I am a rabid KISS fan. If I could preach
every Sunday in kabuki makeup & demon boots, I would!

I'm also a very
skilled backgammon player, and didn't appreciate the value of eating kale until
in my forties!

Now let’s get to the book itself. “Friar Tuck’s Tales for the Common Outlaw” is
an anthology, correct? What kind of
stories will we find?

Yes, Friar Tuck is a
collection of short stories. You're gonna find diverse tales ranging from all
time periods and settings that, at the end of the day, hopefully point you in
the same direction.

I know with everything you create, there is meaning behind
it. Feel like telling us the meaning for
you, or is this something you want people to discover on their own?

The stories in the
book I consider to be parables. So, yes, there's a deeper meaning to be mined.
But beauty is in the eye of the beholder. What people discover for themselves I
can't say nor would I hope to discourage.

But my hope is that by
the end of the book people will see we are all a part of something much bigger and
beautiful than what most of us have ever dared to dream.

Do you have another book
rattling around in there?

As I read advice from bloggers and self-publishing gurus apparently the
best marketing for your first book is to begin writing your second one. So,
yes, I have a few ideas rattling around. My hope for the new year is not only to
enjoy the process of seeing Friar Tuck find its way in the world, but beginning
to get back to creating something fresh.

If there is one character you’ve written or are writing that
you would really like people to meet, who would it be and why?

Spread amongst the
short stories in the book is the over-story of Friar Tuck. He's the one
supposedly telling these scandalous tales and bringing trouble on himself by
doing so. He's who I sometimes fancy myself to be. I enjoy an "amphibious
lifestyle" of playing music and hanging out in bars and clubs all week,
and then preaching and worship leading on Sunday morning. Talking theology over
a tall pint gives me a great thrill. To some these two worlds, religious and
otherwise, don't really go together. For me they absolutely are one in the
same. I thrive in both. There's a lot of church happening in a bar. I wish
there was more bar in church sometimes. So Friar Tuck is who I aspire to be, I'd
love to hang out with, and hope people get to meet as well.

What about being published and
the book industry in general has most surprised you?

Hum, I honestly
haven't been around it enough yet to say. However, one thing I have found is
people's respect level seems to go up for you when you achieve getting your
work "out there." Why it does I couldn't say. I think a lot of people
have a dream of one day writing and publishing a book of their own but not many
actually see it through for one reason or another. So I kinda get the sense
from people who find out I've written a book that I just came up a level for
them, which is a weird feeling.

I know another passion for you is music. What does creating that do for you, and has
that process translated to or influenced your writing?

I've been a songwriter
much longer than I've been an author. One of the most important things a
songwriter can strive for, in my opinion, is to achieve poetry and brevity at
the same time. One of the earliest influences on me as a writer was the poet e.e.
cummings. He really did an amazing job at making a point with as few words as
possible. Bono says writers should be "masters of compression." So I
tried to bring a songwriter’s way with words and poetry into my short stories.
For example, one of my characters is a homeless person who is trudging down the
street. He's tired, cold, and wet. Instead of just listing those qualities I
say he's, "wet foot weary." Same meaning, less words, decent poetry…
I guess.

Rudy and Trish are the main characters in Patricia and my published short stories in the "Evernight: Romance in a World of Darkness" anthologies. You can get to know them as well as get 23 other great stories! Here's where you can find them: